So here's a quick rundown of the year. These are by no means the biggest or most important news stories of 2013; they are, as the title suggests, simply 13 things that happened:
Not the most cheery of titles, particularly for this time of year, but here we go…
I've been thinking about death quite a bit recently. I realise how morbid that sounds, but so many public figures have died recently. Of course, as I blogged about last time, the world lost the legend that is Nelson Mandela not long ago. More recently the actor Peter O'Toole passed away and a couple of months ago so did Lou Reed.
In my personal life as well, the 12th December 2013 marked 10 years since I lost my uncle. My uncle was an amazing person. And his love of living made his death hit a lot harder; I'd also never known anybody to die before and, although it's not a first that is often talked about, a first death is a hard thing to come to terms with (as is any death of someone you love)
But this post is more about life than death.
I studied medieval and early modern English history at school for my A-levels. At that time in history, death was very much central to the experience of life. This was due, mostly, to the Christian belief in the afterlife and the fate of the immortal soul and life on earth was seen just as a transitionary phase. Although, the reformation changed some beliefs (notably purgatory) about life after death, it still remained that death shaped life.
Although this may seem a depressing way to live, it doesn't have to be. Remembering that you will die can help you to gain perspective in a lot of things. Asking yourself will this matter when I die can make you care less about petty arguments and exam grades and focus more on relationships and experiences.
It is also something all living things have in common: we all will live, we all will die. (As Fight Club taught us: 'On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero')
I quote too much, but I will leave you with a quotation from Steve Jobs' Stanford commencement speech. Regardless of his personal life, it is pretty much agreed on that Jobs was successful during his life and his ideas on living are definitely worth considering. Just like my uncle, he seemed to love life and that is, at least by my standards, commendable:
“Remembering that I'll be dead soon is the most important tool I've ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life.
Almost everything--all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure--these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important.
Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.
No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don't want to die to get there. And yet, death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it, and that is how it should be, because death is very likely the single best invention of life. It's life's change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new.”
(Steve Jobs)
So yeah, this post is basically saying YOLO, make the most of it.
How to write a blogpost on Mandela? It feels as though everything that could be written or said about him has been done so since his death on December 5th 2013, but I thought, on the day of his funeral, I would add my own voice to the ongoing tributes.
There is a lot of different ways I could approach this and a lot of different things I could say, but I will try to keep it as brief as possible.
I wasn't alive during Mandela's struggle to end the apartheid; he became South Africa's first democratically elected black president in the same year I was born (1994), so the majority of his life and his legend is history to me. This history is definitely something I would like to explore in more detail, maybe in a future blogpost; however I do not think this is the time for an in-depth analysis.
What I will say is that, for me, as for so many others, Mandela is a huge inspiration. I know I will never achieve the impact he had on the world in my own life, but his compassion and charm, his determination and willpower as well as, for me most importantly, his humility are qualities I want to develop in myself.
Although at first I was extremely saddened by the news, I'm glad, as has been demonstrated by his memorial service, his incredible life is being celebrated.
R.I.P Madiba- gone, but never forgotten. The man who inspired the world.
The 1st of December 1988 marked the first World AIDs Day. It has been held on the same day ever since, but a lot has changed in the last 25 years.
In the late 80s, when the campaign started, AIDs was widely misunderstood and a HIV diagnosis was almost synonymous with a death sentence. Although AIDs (and World AIDs Day) still exists, much progress has been made and many leaders are now calling for 'the beginning of the end of AIDS'. This is a global tipping point 'where the number of people newly infected with HIV is surpassed by the number of people newly offered treatment'. If current rates of progress, due mainly to the incredible advance in science and the global effort, the beginning of the end could be reached as early as 2015.
With these advances, it is also time to rid ourselves of the language of 1988. Its is no longer accurate to say 'AIDS in Africa'; although, of course, it is still a problem in parts of the continent, simply saying this phrase lumps together a continent made up of over 50 countries, each with widely diverging progress. As many as 16 countries, including Ghana, Zambia and Malawi have already reached the beginning of the end, which is a huge testament to their health financing and planning.
Good news stories such as these are often absent from the news headlines.
Having said all this, now is not the time to get complacent. Of course the huge progress made should be celebrated, but we should also realise the problem still exists. In fact, the success in fighting AIDs may have caused, in part, the movement to lose its political momentum as AIDs is no longer seen as an emergency; however even in 2013 it is estimated that funding to treat AIDs is still $3.5 billion short and donor funding has now stalled.
Insufficient money is also not the only problem. Many people are still left behind including LGBT groups, sex workers and drug users. More must be done to reach these vulnerable groups, who are often stigmatised.
So to reflect on the last 25 years, we should celebrate all the progress that has been made, but use this progress as motivation to build on it further and reach more people in order to make the 'beginning of the end of AIDS' a reality.